'Your silence is an insult to our grief': Facebook infuriated a New Zealand official with its sluggish response to the Christchurch massacre

A student lights candle during a vigil to commemorate victims of March 15 shooting, outside the Al Noor mosque in Christchurch, New Zealand.
Associated Press

New Zealand's top privacy official is attacking Facebook for its lack of communication following the Christchurch massacre earlier this month.

Privacy Commissioner John Edwards shared an email he sent to Facebook's executives with the New Zealand Herald, in which he said: "Your silence is an insult to our grief."

Edwards has already expressed his frustration with the tech giant following the shootings, which were broadcast live on its platform.

New Zealand's privacy commissioner has skewered Facebook for its lack of response following the mass shootings in two Christchurch mosques, which were broadcast live on Facebook by the alleged shooter.

Privacy Commissioner John Edwards on Monday gave the New Zealand Herald a copy of an email he sent to Facebook executives in which he voiced his frustrations.

"It would be very difficult for you and your colleagues to overestimate the growing frustration and anger here at Facebook's facilitation of and inability to mitigate the deep, deep pain and harm from the live-streamed massacre of our colleagues, family members and countrymen broadcast over your network," the email said.

Edwards has expressed his frustration over Facebook's lack of communication before. Last week, he tweeted that prior to the massacre, he had video-conferenced with Facebook and the company had promised to keep an open and regular line of communication. He added that he hadn't heard from the company since March 15, when the shootings took place.

Facebook's VP of global policy Monika Bickert told the Herald that she would not "weigh in" on Edwards' demand. She said Facebook has to follow the law when it comes to divulging account details, and that normally Facebook only gives them over to police if there is "something like an imminent threat of violence."